Everybody wants a bit of Rashford at the moment, a piece of the action.

He is still box fresh, still exciting, still the same talent who shot to fame — and fortune — at 17.

Rashford, who turns 20 at the end of the month, is the red-hot ticket in Manchester after another electrifying start to the season.

The hysteria is nowhere near the levels that once saw Georgie Best mobbed by mini-skirted women and bespectacled kids in parkas hunting for autographs when he walked down Deansgate.

Nobody expects Rashford, who is due to start England’s World Cup qualifier at Wembley against Slovenia on Thursday, to go down that road.

Rex Features

Marcus Rashford shows he is better scoring the goals than saving them in England training

News Group Newspapers Ltd

Rashford says his family taught him how to behave properly

News Group Newspapers Ltd

As a result the striker, seen here on England duty with Harry Kane, is level-headed

He appears too smart, too streetwise, too level-headed for that. Instead, he is trying to lead a quiet life, spending the afternoons in the Trafford Centre with his girlfriend or meeting his pals for peri-peri chicken in Nando’s.